Secret Messages can Now be Stored in New Places

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Lock your secrets in polymer pockets! Researchers at the Institut Charles Sadron (CNRS) and the Institut de Chimie Radicalaire (CNRS/Aix-Marseille Université) have developed light-sensitive polymers where light can change the information stored on the molecular scale. Three types of information change have been shown in this work: revealing, changing and erasing a message. The results of this research were published in Nature Communications.

These French scientists have shown that some polymers can act like invisible ink: when exposed to the appropriate wavelength, their monomers are transformed, and the sequence becomes legible. The message only appears if it is subjected to the right light source. The polymers are ‘read’ using mass spectrometry, a technology used routinely in many analytical laboratories.